Literature DB >> 15516348

Corticosteroid injections for trochanteric bursitis: is fluoroscopy necessary? A pilot study.

S P Cohen1, J C Narvaez, A H Lebovits, M P Stojanovic.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Numerous studies have demonstrated that therapeutic injections carried out to treat a variety of different pain conditions should ideally be performed under radiological guidance because of the propensity for blinded injections to be inaccurate. Although trochanteric bursa injections are commonly performed to treat hip pain, they have never been described using fluoroscopy.
METHODS: The authors reviewed recorded data on 40 patients who underwent trochanteric bursa injections for hip pain with or without low back pain. The initial needle placement was done blindly, with all subsequent attempts done using fluoroscopic guidance. After bone contact, imaging was used to determine if the needle was positioned on the lateral edge of the greater trochanter (GT). Once this occurred, 1 ml of radiopaque contrast was injected to assess bursa spread.
RESULTS: The GT was contacted in 78% of cases and a bursagram obtained in 45% of patients on the first needle placement. In 23% of patients a bursagram was obtained on the second attempt and in another 23% on the third attempt. Four patients (10%) required four or more needle placements before a bursagram was appreciated. Attending physicians obtained a bursagram on the first attempt 53% of the time vs 46% for fellows and 36% for residents (P=0.64). Older patients were more likely to require multiple injections than younger patients.
CONCLUSIONS: Radiological confirmation of bursal spread is necessary to ensure that the injectate reaches the area of pathology during trochanteric bursa injections.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15516348     DOI: 10.1093/bja/aei012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Anaesth        ISSN: 0007-0912            Impact factor:   9.166


  9 in total

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5.  Trochanteric area pain, the result of a quartet of bursal inflammation.

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Authors:  Christopher M Wittich; Robert D Ficalora; Thomas G Mason; Thomas J Beckman
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7.  PRP IN THE TREATMENT OF TROCHANTERIC SYNDROME: A PILOT STUDY.

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8.  Comparison of fluoroscopically guided and blind corticosteroid injections for greater trochanteric pain syndrome: multicentre randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Steven P Cohen; Scott A Strassels; Leslie Foster; John Marvel; Kayode Williams; Matthew Crooks; Andrew Gross; Connie Kurihara; Cuong Nguyen; Necia Williams
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2009-04-14

9.  The running athlete: stress fractures, osteitis pubis, and snapping hips.

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  9 in total

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